Consonant Sounds: TH (/θ/) & TH (/ð/) | American English Pronunciation and Ear Training Course

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 29

  • @SreeKrishna-ke2rf
    @SreeKrishna-ke2rf 2 месяца назад

    Can't Thank you enough for breaking down all the variations of the th sounds ! Even after learning how to produce th sounds, I've always noticed native speakers not bringing their tongue infront as much as I'v been taught. Such a great video ! I really appreciate it ❤️

  • @laracroftvideos
    @laracroftvideos 3 года назад +6

    Brilliant! This is everything I was hoping it would be and more! Can't wait for more videos in the consonant series. 😊

    • @NativeEnglishHacks
      @NativeEnglishHacks  3 года назад +2

      Glad to live up to expectations 😎😀 There's a bit more about the TH that I decided to cut, but that information will be in future lessons (linking and commonly mispronounced words)

  • @GG-fy5hm
    @GG-fy5hm 2 года назад +3

    This man should live forever

  • @facundogauna8820
    @facundogauna8820 3 года назад +3

    I knew it.
    I knew you were going to be the first person to make a video about it. Your channel is the best.
    I was completely sure that a was hearing dental Ds and Ts in movies and tv shows, but I needed someone to confirm it.
    Thank u so much!
    Greetings from Argentina.

  • @o_felipe_reis
    @o_felipe_reis 3 года назад +2

    Hi there! You are right! I speak english since many years and I still have some issues with TH. LoL.... Great video buddy!

  • @patrikistok9410
    @patrikistok9410 2 года назад +1

    Thank you! :)

  • @bang_2
    @bang_2 2 года назад

    Love love love this. I gotta make note for this so that i don't forget about this

  • @cesarfordmorel8013
    @cesarfordmorel8013 Год назад

    I hope you are doing well. Thank you for your videos.

  • @IgorOlikh
    @IgorOlikh 2 месяца назад

    Unbelievable! It's so much easier to pronounce as you described. Why is it always described as 'between the teeth'?

    • @NativeEnglishHacks
      @NativeEnglishHacks  2 месяца назад +1

      I assume that's the default, traditional, fully articulated version and teachers just tend to repeat what they were taught with an unjustified emphasis on supposed "clear" speech rather than paying attention to how they actually speak. There's nothing wrong with putting it between the teeth, and it can just happen that way at any time, but we tend to use it more for enunciation and emphasis (even then, it's not required). Ultimately, I'm not completely sure why it's taught that way.
      And thanks for becoming a channel member 🙂

  • @007Layanne
    @007Layanne 3 года назад

    Do you teach on Italki ? One of the best pronounciation teachers I've seen on RUclips

    • @NativeEnglishHacks
      @NativeEnglishHacks  3 года назад +1

      Thanks! I do currently teach on italki, but I'm trying to move away from that over the next year or so if I can so that I can focus on other things (like this channel). I'm not currently looking for students, either, but I might have a few special openings in the near future that I'll announce here if it happens ☺

  • @siddhantkapoor8079
    @siddhantkapoor8079 3 года назад

    Great!! I like your videos before even watching them😁😂 .

  • @liangxu530
    @liangxu530 3 года назад +1

    Is it possible to put all consonants videos into one group of playlist like vowel?

    • @NativeEnglishHacks
      @NativeEnglishHacks  3 года назад +1

      Of course! I was going to do that after I finished all the main lessons for the consonant sounds. I'll make it now, but we still have ch/j and y coming soon ☺

  • @iiAbdullah635
    @iiAbdullah635 2 года назад

    I still struggle pronouncing ch to voiced th for example: watch the.
    is there anything that changes in this one? like one them get dropped or something?

    • @NativeEnglishHacks
      @NativeEnglishHacks  2 года назад

      Not really, especially bc of cases like where "the" and "a" could get confused, for example. However, there are two things you can do to make it easier. 1) Slide into the dental D version of the voiced TH. 2) Make a very lazy TH by slightly moving in that direction after leaving the CH. Regardless of how you do it, it can also help to slightly flatten the tip a bit more for the CH to make the transition more fluid.
      All that and, of course, mouth posture. There's a decent chance that's the real source of the problem

  • @soggy_popcorn
    @soggy_popcorn 3 года назад

    Would you say that replacing th-sounds with a dental d/t is a purely American phenomenon? As far as I can tell, Brits seem to always enunciate the th-sound clearly, unless they speak a “th-less” accent such as Cockney.

    • @NativeEnglishHacks
      @NativeEnglishHacks  3 года назад +1

      Good question. I don't know enough about other dialects to say for sure, but I don't think I've noticed it. Then again, like most Americans, I never noticed in American English, either, until it was brought to my attention about a year ago. Now I hear it all the time. So it's possible other dialects use it

  • @GG-fy5hm
    @GG-fy5hm 2 года назад

    hey I noticed that when you pronounce letter T it doesnt produce that air sound (idk what its called i mean the sound like crisp) most of the time. Can we do that as well without producing that T sound kinda like in british english?

    • @NativeEnglishHacks
      @NativeEnglishHacks  2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/ZC2d6UCMgWs/видео.html

    • @GG-fy5hm
      @GG-fy5hm 2 года назад

      @@NativeEnglishHacks thx

  • @liangxu530
    @liangxu530 3 года назад

    It seems like no any rules when "th" is voiced and when is voiceless. How bad is it when a word should be voiced, but I pronounced voiceless, vice verse because I had difficulty to remember them. Any suggestions? I like you mentioned the common mistakes. Thank you.

    • @NativeEnglishHacks
      @NativeEnglishHacks  3 года назад +2

      Don't remember them, practice them. Repeat them a million times in conversation, in isolation, in example sentences, and so on. Use them. That's how you remember them. That's how you build skill and not just knowledge.

    • @liangxu530
      @liangxu530 3 года назад +1

      Thank you. Will do.